Controversies

4401 to 4416 of about 4795 News
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Arlington Cemetery Buries Unknown Soldier for First Time in 25 Years

When military officials buried the unidentified remains of a Vietnam War soldier in 1984, they figured it was likely to be the last “unknown soldier” memorial for Arlington National Cemetery, given modern advances in DNA technology. In fact, that...   read more

IRS Phone Help Wait Times Double in Two Years

IRS officials were not prepared for the onslaught of phone calls they received from taxpayers during the 2009 filing season. Even though the agency fielded about 12,000 customer service operators at 24 call centers across the United States and Pue...   read more

Senators Propose Ending Telecom Spying Immunity

Whether it constitutes a brave political charge, or merely a legislative decoy, the Retroactive Immunity Repeal Act was introduced last week in the Senate to take away legal protections granted to telecommunications companies that participated in ...   read more

New York Health Workers Protest Mandatory Vaccinations

Health care workers in New York are protesting a mandate from the state government to get vaccinated for the H1NI flu virus. In August, state health officials announced that all medical workers who “could potentially expose patients” must receive ...   read more

Latinos Underrepresented in Federal Jobs

Latinos make up more than 13% of the workforce in the United States, but only 8% of all federal civil servants, and only 3.6% of senior leadership. This makes the fastest-growing minority group in the country also the most underrepresented in th...   read more

Obama Dumps Lobbyists from Government Advisory Committees

Lobbyists in Washington, DC, are ticked off following the quiet announcement by the White House that members of the Third House can no longer serve on government advisory committees. President Barack Obama decided to ban lobbyists from the numerou...   read more

FDIC Chief Wants To End “Too Big To Fail”

America’s most powerful woman believes even the most powerful financial institutions should be allowed to collapse. Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, reiterated her earlier assertions at an international conference la...   read more

N.Y. Times Traces Cargill Hamburger Patty That Paralyzed 22-Year-Old

Eating hamburger meat is not unlike playing Russian roulette. Despite a federal regulation adopted in 1994 banning slaughterhouses from selling meat containing a particularly virulent strain of E. coli (O157:H7), hamburger sold by Cargill in 2007 ...   read more

Obama Clashes with Journalists over Confidentiality Law

Journalists became incensed this week after the White House changed course on legislation designed to protect reporters from going to jail for protecting confidential sources. Previously, President Barack Obama expressed support for a “media shiel...   read more

Government Allows Savings and Loan Criminals to Keep Jobs for One More Year

For the third year in a row, officials in the Treasury Department have extended an exemption that allows savings and loan employees convicted of financial crimes to hold onto their jobs. The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) filed a rule that wen...   read more

Judge Orders Justice Department to Release Cheney Statements on Plame Case

The Obama administration’s efforts to conceal all of former Vice President Dick Cheney’s testimony in the Valerie Plame investigation failed on Thursday, as a federal judge ordered the release of some records. U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan fo...   read more

Too Old for Foreign Service?

Elizabeth Colton got a late start on her diplomatic career, joining the Foreign Service when she was 54. Now, the former journalist is facing an arbitrary restriction that’s threatening to end her brief Foreign Service career.   Next August, Col...   read more

First Ever Wildfire Damage Award; Builders to Pay $36 Million

It took the jury only one day in a precedent-setting case to find two construction companies liable for starting a forest fire in 2002 that burned 18,000 acres of the Angeles National Forest in Southern California. The verdict, which calls for CB&...   read more

VA Halts Public Release of Nursing Home Inspection Reports

No news isn’t necessarily good news when it comes to the much-criticized Department of Veterans Affairs, especially when the agency keeps the news from being known. Late last week VA officials in Washington ordered regional managers to withhold re...   read more

NFL Players at Greater Risk for Dementia

Playing football can be bad for the brain, and the National Football League is starting to own up to this fact. After years of disregarding independent medical studies on the long-term effects that the game has on players, the NFL commissioned its...   read more

Chamber of Commerce Loses Members over Climate Change Denial

The nation’s most powerful business lobby recently called for a “Scopes monkey trial of the 21st century” on the science of climate change, presumably to prove that the outcry over global warming has been exaggerated. This remark did not sit well ...   read more
4401 to 4416 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 274 275 276 277 278 ... 300 Next

Controversies

4401 to 4416 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 274 275 276 277 278 ... 300 Next

Arlington Cemetery Buries Unknown Soldier for First Time in 25 Years

When military officials buried the unidentified remains of a Vietnam War soldier in 1984, they figured it was likely to be the last “unknown soldier” memorial for Arlington National Cemetery, given modern advances in DNA technology. In fact, that...   read more

IRS Phone Help Wait Times Double in Two Years

IRS officials were not prepared for the onslaught of phone calls they received from taxpayers during the 2009 filing season. Even though the agency fielded about 12,000 customer service operators at 24 call centers across the United States and Pue...   read more

Senators Propose Ending Telecom Spying Immunity

Whether it constitutes a brave political charge, or merely a legislative decoy, the Retroactive Immunity Repeal Act was introduced last week in the Senate to take away legal protections granted to telecommunications companies that participated in ...   read more

New York Health Workers Protest Mandatory Vaccinations

Health care workers in New York are protesting a mandate from the state government to get vaccinated for the H1NI flu virus. In August, state health officials announced that all medical workers who “could potentially expose patients” must receive ...   read more

Latinos Underrepresented in Federal Jobs

Latinos make up more than 13% of the workforce in the United States, but only 8% of all federal civil servants, and only 3.6% of senior leadership. This makes the fastest-growing minority group in the country also the most underrepresented in th...   read more

Obama Dumps Lobbyists from Government Advisory Committees

Lobbyists in Washington, DC, are ticked off following the quiet announcement by the White House that members of the Third House can no longer serve on government advisory committees. President Barack Obama decided to ban lobbyists from the numerou...   read more

FDIC Chief Wants To End “Too Big To Fail”

America’s most powerful woman believes even the most powerful financial institutions should be allowed to collapse. Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, reiterated her earlier assertions at an international conference la...   read more

N.Y. Times Traces Cargill Hamburger Patty That Paralyzed 22-Year-Old

Eating hamburger meat is not unlike playing Russian roulette. Despite a federal regulation adopted in 1994 banning slaughterhouses from selling meat containing a particularly virulent strain of E. coli (O157:H7), hamburger sold by Cargill in 2007 ...   read more

Obama Clashes with Journalists over Confidentiality Law

Journalists became incensed this week after the White House changed course on legislation designed to protect reporters from going to jail for protecting confidential sources. Previously, President Barack Obama expressed support for a “media shiel...   read more

Government Allows Savings and Loan Criminals to Keep Jobs for One More Year

For the third year in a row, officials in the Treasury Department have extended an exemption that allows savings and loan employees convicted of financial crimes to hold onto their jobs. The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) filed a rule that wen...   read more

Judge Orders Justice Department to Release Cheney Statements on Plame Case

The Obama administration’s efforts to conceal all of former Vice President Dick Cheney’s testimony in the Valerie Plame investigation failed on Thursday, as a federal judge ordered the release of some records. U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan fo...   read more

Too Old for Foreign Service?

Elizabeth Colton got a late start on her diplomatic career, joining the Foreign Service when she was 54. Now, the former journalist is facing an arbitrary restriction that’s threatening to end her brief Foreign Service career.   Next August, Col...   read more

First Ever Wildfire Damage Award; Builders to Pay $36 Million

It took the jury only one day in a precedent-setting case to find two construction companies liable for starting a forest fire in 2002 that burned 18,000 acres of the Angeles National Forest in Southern California. The verdict, which calls for CB&...   read more

VA Halts Public Release of Nursing Home Inspection Reports

No news isn’t necessarily good news when it comes to the much-criticized Department of Veterans Affairs, especially when the agency keeps the news from being known. Late last week VA officials in Washington ordered regional managers to withhold re...   read more

NFL Players at Greater Risk for Dementia

Playing football can be bad for the brain, and the National Football League is starting to own up to this fact. After years of disregarding independent medical studies on the long-term effects that the game has on players, the NFL commissioned its...   read more

Chamber of Commerce Loses Members over Climate Change Denial

The nation’s most powerful business lobby recently called for a “Scopes monkey trial of the 21st century” on the science of climate change, presumably to prove that the outcry over global warming has been exaggerated. This remark did not sit well ...   read more
4401 to 4416 of about 4795 News
Prev 1 ... 274 275 276 277 278 ... 300 Next